Winner of the 2016 Hugo Award for Best Novel
Book 1 in the double Hugo-Award-winning trilogy
*A New York Times Notable Book*
*Shortlisted for the World Fantasy, Nebula, Kitschies, Audie and Locus Awards*
*The inaugural Wired.com book club pick*
THIS IS THE WAY THE WORLD ENDS . . . FOR THE LAST TIME.
IT STARTS WITH THE GREAT RED RIFT across the heart of the world, spewing ash that blots out the sun.
IT STARTS WITH DEATH, with a murdered son and a missing daughter.
IT STARTS WITH BETRAYAL, and long dormant wounds rising up to fester.
This is the Stillness, a land long familiar with catastrophe, where the power of the earth is wielded as a weapon. And where there is no mercy.
'Astounding' NPR
'Amazing' Ann Leckie
'Breaks uncharted ground' Library Journal
'Powerful' io9
'Elegiac, complex, and intriguing' Publishers Weekly
'Intricate and extraordinary' New York Times
'Brilliant' Washington Post
The Broken Earth trilogy is complete - beginning with The Fifth Season, continuing in The Obelisk Gate (Winner of the 2017 Hugo Award for Best Novel) and concluding with The Stone Sky (Shortlisted for the 2018 Hugo Award for Best Novel).
- ISBN10 031622930X
- ISBN13 9780316229302
- Publish Date 4 August 2015
- Publish Status Active
- Imprint Orbit
- Format eBook
- Language English
Reviews
moraa
For all those that have to fight for the respect that everyone else is given without question.
DESERVING OF EVERY SINGLE ACCOLADE
(please enjoy this short review while I recover)
✨Characterisation (5/5 obviously)
✨Writing (5/5 no questions asked)
✨World building (4/5)
✨Plot (4/5)
✨Magic system (4/5)
Neither myths nor mysteries can hold a candle to the most infinitesimal spark of hope.
sarahjay
ibeforem
The Fifth Season is the first of a trilogy, so don't expect a complete story here. It took me a little while to get into, because there is a lot of world building. The world of this story is not like our own. There is one single continent, full of "comms" that are settlements. There is also a caste system, and people are named by their function, like Strongbacks, or Leadership. And every so often there is a big enough "shake" to throw the entire continent into a "Fifth Season" -- a terrible time of struggle.
The story is centered around 3 female characters, all of whom are orogenes. Orogenes are people who can control the energy within the earth, and they are both used by the ruling class to control the shakes and keep things stable and reviled by those who are non-orogenes.
The first woman we meet is Essun, who has found her young son dead and her husband and daughter gone. We learn that she is an orogene, and so are her son and daughter. It's the discovery of this secret that has led to her son's death, and now Essun is determined to track down her husband and save her daughter.
Next is Damaya, a young orogene girl who has just discovered her powers and who is being given away by her parents to be taken to Fulcrum, the place in the Captial where orogenes are trained to control and use their powers.
Finally we meet Syenite, a young orogene woman of moderate power who has been told that she needs to have a child with a much stronger orogene, and therefore must accompany him on a journey across the continent as he goes on his next mission.
The stories of these three are woven together in a masterful way, until the last piece falls into place and you realize that what you've been reading is a real masterpiece. I look forward to continuing this story, now that my fantasy-reading muscles have been fully stretched!
Amber (The Literary Phoenix)
There is some discourse about the actual genre of The Fifth Season. I’m going against the grain to say this feels more like science fiction than fantasy to me. First of all, it’s dystopia, which fits snugly in the science fiction parent genre. The other reason is the magic. It’s not so much magic as evolution. The Origins are fascinating, and the Guardians are too. Terrifying and curious. The way humans have been manipulated by both the earth and one another to adapt to the seasons is an interesting study in natural sciences and neurology. I suppose in many ways, it’s easier to think about the orogeny as a type of innate magic… but this is human evolution through-and-through. Very cool.
The characters here are so good. They’re faceted and growing. Kyanite is a particular favorite for me. The summary of this book as seen on Goodreads discusses Essun, but it was the Kyanite storyline who captured my heart. A woman who rises to every challenge with a complicated emotional response to almost everything. That said, all the characters are really fantastically written. Characters who pull my heartstrings and intrigue me pull me into a book more strongly than any aspect of worldbuilding and Jemisin’s subtle yet direct style of storytelling is incredibly good. Of course, those who have read the book will know exactly how cleverly done the POVs are, but I don’t want to spoil that here, because it was a complete surprise to me and I loved it.
The deeper I got into the book, the more and more engrossed I became. The action is subtle and the scenery is vast. Jemisin’s writing style is slow paced, but it never feels slow. Everything is so well-described, so well-explained, and to be completely honest, I’m excited to dig into The Obelisk Gate. The ending left us with so much possibility and a possible flip in world-view, and I’m … I’m just excited.
nannah
The writing? Beautiful. The world building? Beautiful.
I just couldn't ... get into it. I don't know what it was. The 2nd person narrative or the fact the 2nd-person-pov protagonist got less page time than every other pov character or just that I couldn't connect to the characters (other than Hoa)? I don't know.
But what made me stop was when Damaya got to the Fulcrum for her training, and it ended up being like some school setting where every child schemed against one another, and of course, Damaya was the most bullied kid there. Mostly, though, it was when during the bullying, there was talk about gay sex and "breeders". It opens a huge can of worms for me, and I just can't go there; I don't want to know where it goes.
Maybe when I'm in a better place, I'll pick this up again (so no rating, of course).
clementine
Very interesting fantasy world that avoids a lot of the annoying tropes and pitfalls that the male-dominated fantasy canon often falls into. I really enjoyed how Jemison normalizes same-sex relationships, trans people, and non-normative family structures. It took me a while to get my bearings in this world, and this definitely felt like the first book in a series - setting the tone for more interesting action, with a lot of necessary exposition to situate readers in a completely different world. While this book is well-written and fully developed, I'm just not sure this series is for me, so I probably won't continue with it. I'd definitely recommend it to fantasy fans, but I don't tend to read much in the genre and with so many things on my to-read list I'm going to move on to things I'm more excited about.
lisacee
teachergorman
luddite
What a book. Such good world building. And good writing to boot.